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Pages in category "Houses in New Brunswick" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C.
This house is an excellent example of loyalist construction in late 18th-century New Brunswick. It was built out of necessity and with the available material: wood. Trinity Church and Rectory: 1789: Kingston Creek, New Brunswick: Reverend Samuel Andrews House: 1 1 ⁄ 2: 1790: Boultenhouse: 2: 1790: Sackville, New Brunswick: Sanderson House: 2: ...
central and western New Brunswick, parts of southeastern Quebec NB 45°58′01″N 66°40′11″W / 45.9669°N 66.6697°W / 45.9669; -66.6697 ( Wolastoq National Historic Site of Federal ( 18954 )
The family owned the house until 1961, and lived in it on and off until the death of Louis Merritt Harrison, in 1958. The house was then occupied by Mr. Harrison's housekeeper until the sale of the property to K C Irving and an associate, in 1961, at which point the New Brunswick Historical Society opened the house as a museum.
12 Neighbours is a Canadian non-profit tiny house community in Fredericton, New Brunswick.Started in 2021 by multi-millionaire software engineer Marcel LeBrun, the community includes 96 tiny homes built between 2021 and 2024.
A 24-hectare (59-acre) site featuring the remains of an early 19th-century shipyard typical of a New Brunswick one in its time; an undisturbed cultural landscape combining national and archaeological features associated with 19th-century shipbuilding in eastern Canada Belmont House / R. Wilmot Home [7] 1820 (completed) 1975 Lincoln
Belmont House is a historic building located on New Brunswick Route 102 in Lincoln. The house, built in 1820, was originally built as the home of John Murray Bliss, "the son of a Loyalist settler who became a" justice of the New Brunswick Supreme Court. [1] In 1839, the property was bought by the Wilmot family, a family of Loyalist settlers. [1]
The Member of Parliament for the Tobique-Mactuquac riding in the House of Commons of Canada is TJ Harvey. [14] As a Canadian Liberal TJ became federal representation for residents of Bath, New Brunswick in the 2015 elections. [15] Member of Legislative Assembly for the Carleton-Victoria riding is Andrew Harvey. [16]